alias ("target")
The alias attribute causes the declaration to be emitted as an alias for another symbol, which must be specified. For instance,
void __f () { /* Do something. */; } void f () __attribute__ ((weak, alias ("__f")));
defines
f
to be a weak alias for__f
. In C++, the mangled name for the target must be used. It is an error if__f
is not defined in the same translation unit.Not all target machines support this attribute.
1 Answer
You can do something like this for C. This is supported for x86 and x64 for msvc v19.15.
#include <stdio.h>
void __f() { puts("This function is aliased"); }
void f();
#pragma comment(linker, "/alternatename:f=__f")
int main()
{
f();
}
See the compiled demo here.
I have tested this in Visual Studio 2017 with /TC
option.
-
compile nothing prove here. need link, because
f
if not found redirected to__f
at link time. also#pragma comment(linker, "/alternatename:f=__f")
only for x64 and c code. for c++ code symbols will be mangled?f@@YAXXZ=?__f@@YAXXZ
must be. for c and x86 also will be mangle depend from calin convention. say_f=___f
for __cdecl or_f@0=___f@0
for __stdcall and@f@0=@__f@0
for __fastcall– RbMmNov 20, 2018 at 13:06 -
I tested it on my PC. But I obviously could not link it here. rextester has an older version of VC++ compiler.– P.WNov 20, 2018 at 13:07
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your current code will be ok only if you compile as c code and target platform x64 otherwise you got unresolved external symbol– RbMmNov 20, 2018 at 13:10
#pragma comment(linker, "/alternatename:f=__f")
must be (where in place f and __f must be exactly mangled names)